Jesuit Provincial to Deliver 2018 May Commencement Address

The leader of one of the nation’s largest Jesuit provinces, Ronald Mercier, S.J.,
will give this year’s spring commencement address at Saint Louis University.

Ronald Mercier, S.J., provincial of the Jesuits' Central and Southern Province, will
be this year's May commencement speaker. Photo by Steve Dolan

Mercier will also receive an honorary degree from the University along with U.S. Rep.
William Lacy Clay Sr. (A&S ’53), Edith Cunnane, founder of the St. Patrick Center,
and former St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay (Law ’80).

The address and honorary degree conferrals will take place during the University’s commencement exercises on Saturday, May 19, at Chaifetz Arena. The ceremony begins at 9 a.m.

Mercier, formerly a professor of theology at SLU, entered the Society of Jesus in
1975. Ordained in 1987, he spent 15 years as dean and professor of ethics at Regis
College, the Jesuit theology school at the University of Toronto before serving as
the founding executive director of the Jesuit Collaborative in Boston. The collaborative
is a network linking ministries in Ignatian spirituality from North Carolina to Maine.

After coming to SLU in 2010, Mercier served as rector of Bellarmine House, a community
of Jesuits in formation who study at SLU, and also took part in sacramental ministry
at St. Francis Xavier College Church and at St. Mary’s Assumption Ukrainian Byzantine
Catholic Church in addition to his teaching duties.

Mercier, an expert in health care ethics dealing with the end of life, will receive
an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree at the May 19 commencement.

Honorary Degree Recipients

William Lacy Clay Sr., a former congressman, will receive an honorary Doctor of Public Service degree from
SLU for his dedication to residents in need throughout St. Louis, his lifetime commitment
to civil rights and for his advocacy for marginalized people. After being drafted
into the U.S. Army, he led a boycott of his base’s barbershop to protest its policy
restricting services to African-American soldiers to a single day a week.

Following his discharge from the Army, Clay became active in St. Louis’s civil rights
movement and won his first public office as an alderman in 1959.

Elected to Congress in 1968, Clay became the first African-American from Missouri
to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. He would go on to serve 16 terms
representing Missouri’s First District, which includes the City of St. Louis. Clay
was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus. He worked to increase the
federal minimum wage, protect union workers and to increase education equity during
his 32 years in office.

Edith Cunnane worked with patients in St. Louis who had chemical dependencies before founding St.
Patrick Center, a non-profit center providing housing assistance, employment services
and life-skills training to people who are homeless or at-risk for homelessness, in
partnership with the Archdiocese of St. Louis and Catholic Charities in 1983.

Cunnane has also served as executive director of Confluence St. Louis and was elected
to the St. Louis County Board for its third district in 1997.

She has received numerous awards including the United Nations Human Rights Award and
has served on the boards of Criminal Justice Ministry, Girls Club Inc., the Malcolm
Bliss Mental Health Center and Kids in the Middle.

Cunnane will receive an honorary Doctor of Public Service degree from SLU for her
leadership in creating safe access to resources for those who are homeless and for
people suffering from mental illness. She is noted for her dedication to the region
through her roles as a community activist, volunteer and civic leader.

Francis Slay, a 1980 graduate of SLU’s School of Law, was the longest-serving mayor in the history
of the City of St. Louis. During four terms in office, Slay helped bring the $2 billion
National Geospatial Intelligence Agency headquarters to the city and won voter approval
for a tax increase to fund expansion of the region’s MetroLink system. He supported
a plan to reduce childhood exposure to lead paint and the city’s nationally recognized
plan to reduce homelessness.

Slay’s leadership is credited with helping make St. Louis one of the fastest-growing
startup cities in the nation, due to his focus on collaboration.

His collaborative efforts have included downtown and city neighborhood revival efforts
and a partnership with the National Parks Service that spurred $400 million in improvements
to the Gateway Arch grounds.

The University will award an honorary Doctor of Public Service degree to Slay for
his dedication to the City of St. Louis, his years of public service as an elected
official and for his commitment to providing services to some of the region’s most
vulnerable residents.

Founded in 1818, Saint Louis University is one of the nation’s oldest and most prestigious
Catholic institutions. Rooted in Jesuit values and its pioneering history as the first
university west of the Mississippi River, SLU offers nearly 13,000 students a rigorous,
transformative education of the whole person. At the core of the University’s diverse
community of scholars is SLU’s service-focused mission, which challenges and prepares
students to make the world a better, more just place.